Abstract
How mechanical stress actively impacts the physiology and pathophysiology of cells and tissues is little investigated in vivo. The colon is constantly submitted to multi-frequency spontaneous pulsatile mechanical waves, which highest frequency functions, of 2 s period, remain poorly understood. Here we find in vivo that high frequency pulsatile mechanical stresses maintain the physiological level of mice colon stem cells (SC) through the mechanosensitive Ret kinase. When permanently stimulated by a magnetic mimicking-tumor growth analogue pressure, we find that SC levels pathologically increase and undergo mechanically induced hyperproliferation and tumorigenic transformation. To mimic the high frequency pulsatile mechanical waves, we used a generator of pulsed magnetic force stimulation in colonic tissues pre-magnetized with ultra-magnetic liposomes. We observed the pulsatile stresses using last generation ultra-wave dynamical high-resolution imaging. Finally, we find that the specific pharmacological inhibition of Ret mechanical activation induces the regression of spontaneous formation of SC, of CSC markers, and of spontaneous sporadic tumorigenesis in Apc mutated mice colons. Consistently, in human colon cancer tissues, Ret activation in epithelial cells increases with tumor grade, and partially decreases in leaking invasive carcinoma. High frequency pulsatile physiological mechanical stresses thus constitute a new niche that Ret-dependently fuels mice colon physiological SC level. This process is pathologically over-activated in the presence of permanent pressure due to the growth of tumors initiated by pre-existing genetic alteration, leading to mechanotransductive self-enhanced tumor progression in vivo, and repressed by pharmacological inhibition of Ret.
Highlights
Aude Michel 7, Christine Ménager 7, Didier Meseure 5, Charlie Demené 2, Mickael Tanter 2, Maria Elena Fernández-Sánchez 1,9✉ & Emmanuel Farge 1,9✉
Since we found that the periodic pulsed mechanical stress mimicking high frequency physiological pulsatile movements maintains the homeostatic rate of Lgr5+ stem cells (SC), we wondered whether additional permanent 1kPa pathological mechanical stresses induced by tumor growth pressure could over-activate the SC
Following 1 month of magnetically induced tumor growth pressure initiated on 3-month-old mice, we found a significant increase in the number of the CD133 + crypts per mouse compared with control mice (4 and 9-month-old), and comparable with its level in 5-month-old mice with gastric tumors showing that magnetically induced tumor growth pressure promotes the expression of the CD133 cancer cell marker in Apc colon crypts
Summary
Aude Michel 7, Christine Ménager 7, Didier Meseure 5, Charlie Demené 2, Mickael Tanter 2, Maria Elena Fernández-Sánchez 1,9✉ & Emmanuel Farge 1,9✉. We find in vivo that high frequency pulsatile mechanical stresses maintain the physiological level of mice colon stem cells (SC) through the mechanosensitive Ret kinase. High frequency pulsatile physiological mechanical stresses constitute a new niche that Ret-dependently fuels mice colon physiological SC level This process is pathologically over-activated in the presence of permanent pressure due to the growth of tumors initiated by pre-existing genetic alteration, leading to mechanotransductive selfenhanced tumor progression in vivo, and repressed by pharmacological inhibition of Ret. Mechanical stresses due to cell deformation or substrate stiffness change have been identified to actively change cell phenotypes, such as cell shape, apoptosis, stiffness, or motility[1–4]. Mechanical cues strongly influence cell fate and physiological functions[5,6], but can induce pathological dysfunction such as amplifying hyper-proliferation and invasiveness during tumorigenesis[7,8]. None of these studies have, to our knowledge, linked mechanical cues involved in homeostatic process regulation to their deregulation leading to pathological features in vivo
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